Originally posted by: Gstanfor
Originally posted by: 5150Joker
Originally posted by: Gstanfor
Congratulations, you've found the exception that proves the rule!
Who knows what the guy did to the card (pick it up by the heatsink etc) to cause it to run hot, or maybe he got unlucky and purchased a (very rare) card with faulty cooling.
My search a few forums and see how msny more nVidia owners you can fin in the same boat. While you are at it search for people experiencing problems with ATi (9800/9700 series especially).
Tally the results up, and I think you'll find you have the answer to your title question...
Go read the thread. He says he has a well ventilated case and the cooling was stock. 6800 GTs always ran in the 70s range. Mine did too when I had one and my 6800 Go Ultra (granted its a laptop) runs at a scorching 90 C.
What have the points you raised got to do with what I posted? I agree with ronin that his case ventilation probably saved him.
Now the possibilities here are:
Faulty fan - almost unheard of on mid range/high end nVidia cards unless you buy a totally crap brand, and even then its rare.
Heatsink not contacting GPU correctly - once again, out of the factory this is almost unheard of for the sort of card he has.
Once again I suggest he has somehow mishandled the card (lifted it by the heatsink, twisted the heatsink or something similar) for this to occur.
By way of reference, my own card - a leadtek 6800GT idles at 42 degrees Celcius, runs at full load 55 degrees celcius, and on extremely hot australian summer days *may*reach a mamimum of 61 degrees celcius.